the aves – Play – Review – Union Arts Center

@showsiveseen Jiehae Park's "the aves" "what if" dialogue #play at @unionartscenter. Robbie Matos's lighting design was the star of the show! Complemented by LB Morse's scenic design. Closes 5/3/26. showsiveseen.com/15232 Director: Sheila Daniels Stage Mgr: Jaime J Kranz or Mackenzie Breda #theatre #showsiveseen #pigeon ♬ Impostor Syndrome – Sidney Gish

Elevator Thoughts (aka Tweet): Jiehae Park’s the aves what-if dialogue play at Union Arts Center. Robbie Matos’s lighting design was the star of the show! Complemented by LB Morse’s scenic design. Closes 5/3/26.

Recommendation:
See it if you’re okay with dialogue plays.


Was This the First Time I Attended a Production of this Show? Yes

Would I See It Again 3 Years from Now? No

Mainstream Appeal: Low to medium

If A Random Stranger Asked What Show They Should See This Weekend, Would I Mention This Production? Maybe

My Synopsis (No Spoilers): Two couples longing for change, a second chance, or (maybe?) a cure undergo a body-swapping procedure.

Synopsis from the Licensor or Theatre Company: An older couple enjoys a summer day on a park bench, talking about birds and the likelihood of rain. A simple conversation…or maybe more. An ordinary afternoon transforms into a shifting world of surreal possibilities in a stunning and surprisingly funny meditation on memory, forgiveness, and the lifelong process of becoming who we are. From the mind of acclaimed playwright Jiehae Park in her signature innovative style, this Seattle premiere will reignite your sense of wonder.

Type: Play

World Premiere: No

Several or Few Scenes: Few

Several or Few Settings/Locations: One – a park bench

Static (Stationary) or Dynamic Set: Static

Prior Exposure/Knowledge Required: None

Defined Plot/Storyline: It was way more dialogue than action

Union Actor(s): 1

Total Actor(s): 5

Perceived Pace of the Show: Slow to medium

Was there an intermission? No

Length (Including Any Intermission): 90 minutes

Other Rave(s)

  • Design: From the moment I found my seat, the production signaled that its design would be a highlight. While waiting for the show to begin, lighting designer Robbie Mato offered a quiet preview of his craft with gentle, unhurried transitions between dawn, morning, afternoon, dusk, and night. Occasionally, the spotlights swept outward like a burst of glistening sunlight on the audience.

    When one scene called for a thunderstorm, Mato’s sudden flash of light paired seamlessly with Matt Starritt’s sound design to depict lightning. The one misstep came early though when the ambient park sounds cut out abruptly, creating a jarring silence that felt out of step with the otherwise gentle, gradual atmosphere the lighting design had established before the show began. A slow fade of the ambient audio rather than a hard cut would have better served the transition.

    Scenic designer LB Morse brought quiet ingenuity to the passage of seasons. Four tree branches hung above the stage, each illuminated in turn to mark green summer, gold autumn, a bare snowy winter, and cherry blossom spring. As the seasons shifted, leaves, snow, or petals drifted down to the stage and the spotlight illumination moved to the next season’s branch. However, it was puzzling that they skipped summer at the play’s end. Was that symbolic? And while the branches transformed beautifully overhead, the lush foliage at stage level remained unchanged, which wasn’t consistent against the stark, barren winter background projection. The park bench and surrounding greenery otherwise evoked an almost storybook aura between an idyllic pastoral impressionist painting and the saturated perfection of a Nintendo landscape.

Other Musing(s) and Observation(s)

  • Body Swap: The play posed a compelling hypothetical. What if body-swapping technology was possible? At times, the performers truly imitated a different character and the shift was readable. At other times, particularly early on, it was unclear whether the blending of mannerisms was intentional (suggesting that swapped bodies retained traces of their former selves) or whether it was simply inconsistency. What exactly transferred in the swap remained fuzzy. Did the playwright intend for blended new characters? Additionally, for at least half the characters, the motivations driving their decision to swap were muddled, which made it difficult to invest in their consequences.
  • Jock: Jerik Fernandez’s turn as a frat-boy jock persona was an unexpected delight. He portrayed the archetype with a loose, self-satisfied confidence reminiscent of Kellan Lutz and Alan Ritchson.
  • Random Character: A brief appearance by an unnamed, non-speaking actor on stage for no more than a minute added little to the narrative. Why did the role exist at all? It felt like a remnant of an earlier script draft that hadn’t been cut in time. Honestly, it was an unnecessary production cost.
  • Pigeons and Doves: Another puzzling detour was talking pigeon puppets. However, the puppetry itself by designer Annett Mateo had genuine charm, and the neck movements alone were worth a smile. It was a missed opportunity though that the script didn’t protest much the underlying colorism between pigeons and doves.

Theatre Company: Union Arts Center

Venue: The Falls Theatre at Union Arts Center

Venue Physical Address: 700 Union St, Seattle, WA 98101

Price Range: $44 – 84

Ticket Affordability Options: See the theatre’s official pages about discounts and pay-what-you-can performances.

Seating: Assigned Seats

Parking: Paid lot or paid street parking. If I don’t walk to this theatre, I park in the old convention center garage with the entrance between Seneca and Pike. There is indoor access from the garage to the theatre if you walk through the old convention center.

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Photos: See production photos below by Giao Nguyen.

Cast and Production Team: See after photos below.

Varinique “V” Davis as the Young Woman and Jerik Fernandez as the Young Man. Photo by Giao Nguyen.
Varinique “V” Davis as the Young Woman and Kathy Hsieh as the Old Woman. Photo by Giao Nguyen.
Bird puppets from THE AVES. Photo by Giao Nguyen.
Varinique “V” Davis as the Young Woman and Jerik Fernandez as the Young Man. Photo by Giao Nguyen.
Kathy Hsieh as the Old Woman and R. Hamilton Wright as the Old Man. Photo by Giao Nguyen.

An Enemy of the People – Play – Review – Union Arts Center

@showsiveseen “An Enemy of the People” #play by @unionartscenter & @seattleshakespeareco starring Aaron Blakely. Erin Brockovich meets Henrik #Ibsen. Timely mirror to the state of our country. Excellent mob scene fight choreographed by @geoffreyalm. Perfect for Seattle’s hero-complex, idealist activist spirit. Only 1 more performance left! Review: showsiveseen.com/13748 #scandal #corruption #conspiracy ♬ Way down We Go – KALEO

Elevator Thoughts (aka Tweet): An Enemy of the People play by Union Arts Center & Seattle Shakespeare Company starring Aaron Blakely. Erin Brockovich meets Henrik Ibsen. Timely mirror to the state of our country. Excellent mob scene fight choreographed by Geoffrey Alm. Perfect for Seattle’s hero-complex, idealist activist spirit. Only 2 performances left!

Recommendation:
See it if you enjoy dialogue plays.


Was This the First Time I Attended a Production of this Show? Yes

Would I See It Again 3 Years from Now? Probably not, but it was good.

Mainstream Appeal: Low to medium

If A Random Stranger Asked What Show They Should See This Weekend, Would I Mention This Production? Yes

My Synopsis (No Spoilers): When a physician discovers that the town’s lucrative public baths (their lifeblood of income) are dangerously contaminated, the community is forced to confront an unsettling choice: protect public health or bankrupt the townsfolk.

Synopsis from the Licensor or Theatre Company: The Tony Award-winning adaptation comes to Seattle! Amy Herzog’s “smart, sharp, and relevant” (Deadline) take on this Henrik Ibsen timeless classic wraps us deep in an entangled web of truth, power and complacency. Dr. Stockmann has it all – but when he uncovers a catastrophe in the making that threatens lives, he runs up against those in power. As tensions rise, Stockmann must choose: follow his conscience, and risk destruction? Or join the conspiracy?

Type: Play

World Premiere: No

Several or Few Scenes: Few

Several or Few Settings/Locations: Few

Static (Stationary) or Dynamic Set: Mostly static

Prior Exposure/Knowledge Required: No

Defined Plot/Storyline: Yes, but it was more dialogue than action.

Union Actors: 6

Total Actors: 13

Perceived Pace of the Show: Like many plays, it started slow without a good hook, but it eventually picked up stride to medium speed.

Was there an intermission? Yes

Length (Including Any Intermission): 2 hours

Other Rave(s)

  • Looking Glass: This production was timely given our country’s current state of affairs. It evoked the tensions of the COVID-19 era balancing public health against economic pressures. It also highlighted the friction between the masses and perceived elitism of learned healthcare professionals like with vaccinations and COVID-19. It critiqued corporations that complicitly pass the bill of their own cost-cutting mistakes onto taxpayers. At its core, the show was a stark reminder of how money drives decisions and influences the world around us.
  • Binary Morality: Similarly, the production highlighted that the heroic ideal of always doing what is ‘right’ can be a flawed, binary way of viewing morality. It demonstrated that following an absolute ‘do what is right’ philosophy should be more nuanced, involving difficult decisions that can inadvertently harm ordinary people. The play showed the perspective that there are casualties in the pursuit of idealism.
  • Performative Progressivism: I loved how the script skewered performative progressivism and activism pursued more for the thrill of disruption than genuine conviction. Billing (played by Josh Kenji Lanager) embodied the archetypal young faux-progressive from Brooklyn (or dare I say Capitol Hill) likely funded by mommy’s credit card who loudly champions causes for the sake of clout and chaos. They would just as quickly change their tune and sell their soul the moment those ideals threatened their own comfort.
  • Confrontations: I love heightened emotional scenes of outbursts/arguments, and this production was rife with them. A standout moment was in Act One during a heated confrontation between brothers Thomas Stockmann (played by Aaron Blakely) and Peter Stockmann (played by Bradford Farwell).
  • Town Hall: The second act opened with a town hall scene that ingeniously drew the audience (seated in the round) into the role of the townspeople. Geoffrey Alm’s fight choreography created a realistic mob scene, capturing the terrifying momentum of herd mentality with convincing falls and visceral intensity.

Other Musing(s) and Observation(s)

  • Ending (No Spoiler): The ending felt overly idealistic and conveniently resolved … maybe even lazy. Call me fatalistic, but the conclusion packaged in a tidy little bow can’t solve the complex problems presented in the play.
  • Ensemble: Unfortunately, the ensemble didn’t get much stage time. I really only noticed them during the powerful second-act opener, when they appeared as heckling townspeople. It’s just as well though that it was one the most dramatic scene in the show.
  • Chlorine: The scientific part of me thinks the play could have been easily resolved with modern chlorination. Though I suppose that wouldn’t make for much of a story!

Theatre Company: Union Arts Center (ACT Theatre and Seattle Shakespeare Company)

Venue: Union Arts Center

Venue Physical Address: 700 Union St, Seattle, WA 98101

Price Range: $87 to $104

Ticket Affordability Options: Check out the theatre’s official discount page.

Dates: September 20 to October 5, 2025

Seating: Assigned Seating

Parking: Paid lot or paid street parking. If I don’t walk to this theatre, I park in the old convention center garage with the entrance between Seneca and Pike. There is indoor access from the garage to the theatre if you walk through the old convention center.

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Cast and Production Team: See after pictures below.

Preview Post – An Enemy of the People – Play – Union Arts Center

An Enemy of the People play at Union Arts Center. Don’t wait for my full review to buy tickets since it closes 10/5/25 with only 4 more performances left! #idealism #scandal #corruption #ibsen

Tickets: https://www.unionartscenter.org/an-enemy-of-the-people/

Final Full Review: https://www.showsiveseen.com/an-enemy-of-the-people-play-review-union-arts-center/

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Golden – Play – Review – ACT Theatre

@showsiveseen @Andrew's "#Golden" #play at @acttheatre. Reflects on our universal desperate urge to cling to the glory days. @Kaughlin shines as the delightful, heartfelt Quikk character. Realistic #laundromat scenic design by Parmida Ziaei. Closes 5/11/25. #Review: showsiveseen.com/12756 Production Video: Howard Shack Director: Tyrone Phillips Stage Mgr: @Shay Trusty #showsiveseen #theatre #goldenBoy #recession ♬ Phase – Kesha Shantrell

Elevator Thoughts (aka Tweet): Andrew Lee Creech’s Golden play at ACT Theatre. Reflects on our universal desperate urge to cling to the glory days. Kaughlin Caver shines as the delightful, heartfelt Quikk character. Realistic laundromat scenic design by Parmida Ziaei. #goldenBoy #recession

Recommendation:
See it if you’re okay with dialogue plays or world premieres.


Was This the First Time I Attended a Production of this Show? Yes

Would I See It Again 3 Years from Now? No

Mainstream Appeal: Medium

My Synopsis (No Spoilers): The former golden boy desperately scrambles to reclaim the glory and luck of his yesteryears before the Great Recession washed it all away. With his laundromat failing, his home on the line, and his separated wife slipping further away, he clings to what little remains of a vanished American dream.

Synopsis from the Licensor or Theatre Company: Morris Golden, fighting to save his laundromat after The Great Recession of 2008, finds an unexpected source of hope in a broken change machine with mysterious powers. From the mind of celebrated Seattle writer Andrew Lee Creech, and first seen at ACT’s inaugural New Works Northwest festival, comes a riveting world premiere that peels back the layers of lives and relationships to reveal the profound impact of choice and the enduring power of human connection. Golden is part of Creech’s nine-play cycle, The Legacy Plays Project, which examines pivotal moments in the lives of Black Americans throughout U.S. history.

Type: Play

World Premiere: Yes

Several or Few Scenes: A couple

Several or Few Settings/Locations: One – a laundromat

Static (Stationary) or Dynamic Set: Static

Prior Exposure/Knowledge Required: No, but you’ll likely appreciate this more if you have even a passing familiarity with the American Great Recession.

Defined Plot/Storyline: Yes-ish, but there’s only so much that can occur in a dialogue play.

Union Actors: 2

Total Actors: 6

Perceived Pace of the Show: Slow to medium speed

Was there an intermission? No

Length (Including Any Intermission): 1.5 hours

Other Rave(s)

  • Quikk: Kaughlin Caver delightfully portrayed the playfully optimistic Quikk with ease. Though Quikk’s schemes were occasionally flawed, Caver made it clear that beneath the hustle lay genuine heart and good intentions. Unlike Morris Golden (played by Ty Willis), who clinged to nostalgia and luck, Quikk believed in forging a better future through sheer effort and hope.
  • Funny Lines: The script occasionally contained unexpected random funny lines like, “I think one of them [nipples] winked at me.”
  • Sweet Dreams, Dark Thoughts: I audibly gasped at the play’s unexpected dark turn just before the surreal fantasy dream sequence in the middle of the show. I always love bold, unsettling twists in theatre that catch you off guard.
  • Scenic Design: Parmida Ziaei’s set design convincingly recreated the look and feel of a real run-down laundromat, down to thoughtful details like a functioning temperamental coin machine (whether or not it was her doing).

Other Musing(s) and Observation(s)

  • Cash: In theatre, it’s practically a law of nature that the moment a character comes into a large sum of cash, you can bet something disastrous is about to happen to it. It makes me think back to Taproot Theatre’s recent A Raisin in the Sun (which Arlando Smith was also in). Why does no one ever just put the money in a bank? People, take advantage of free FDIC insurance! In this production, the choice to not deposit cash immediately raised questions: was it poor Americans’ lack of trust in banks (not to mention post-Great Recession anxiety), or was it simply narrative convenience?
  • Coin Machine: It’s baffling that Morris Golden didn’t simply refund customers when his machine ate their dollar without dispensing quarters. Honestly, I would have channeled my inner Karen and demand my money back.
  • Black Oppression: Morris Golden’s tirade on the systemic forces that have historically oppressed Black communities (slavery, sharecropping, highway construction) came across more like an educational laundry list (no pun intended with the laundromat theme) for the audience than natural dialogue. While these are crucial topics to address, they need to resonate more organically in the script.
  • Moral of the Story: So, what’s the takeaway here? If you’re struggling, you’re doomed unless someone throws you a lifeline? That’s sad. What about luck or pulling yourself up? I hate relying on people.

Theatre Company: ACT Theatre

Venue: Gregory A. Falls Theatre at ACT Theatre

Venue Physical Address: 700 Union St, Seattle, WA 98101

Price Range: $65-94

Ticket Affordability Options: Check out the theatre’s official discounts page.

Dates: 4/26/25 to 5/11/25

Seating: Assigned Seating

Parking: Paid lot or paid street parking. If I don’t walk to this theatre, I park in the old convention center garage with the entrance between Seneca and Pike. There is indoor access from the garage to the theatre if you walk through the old convention center.

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Pictures: See production pictures below by Rosemary Dai Ross.

Cast and Production Team: See after pictures below.

Zora Harris (Mesgana Alemshowa). Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross.
L to R: Earl (Arlando Smith), Quikk (Kaughlin Caver), Jazmine Harris (Elena Flory-Barnes), and Zora Harris (Mesgana Alemshowa). Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross.
Jazmine Harris (Elena Flory-Barnes) and Quikk (Kaughlin Caver). Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross.
Morris Golden (Ty Willis) and Rheeda Golden (Tracy Michelle Hughes). Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross.
Rheeda Golden (Tracy Michelle Hughes) and Morris Golden (Ty Willis). Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross.
Earl (Arlando Smith). Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross.
Morris Golden (Ty Willis) and Quikk (Kaughlin Caver). Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross.
Credits from printed Encore program.

Preview Post – Golden – Play – ACT Theatre

Congrats to Andrew Lee Creech on the opening night of his world premiere Golden play at ACT Theatre. Performing till 5/11/25. Stay tuned for my full review. #goldenBoy #recession #laundromat

Tickets: https://www.acttheatre.org/2024-25-season/golden/

Final Full Review: https://www.showsiveseen.com/golden-play-review-act-theatre/

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